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  1. Napoleon III. ( französisch Napoléon III; * 20. April 1808 in Paris; † 9. Januar 1873 in Chislehurst bei London) war unter seinem Geburtsnamen Charles-Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte (auch Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte) während der Zweiten Republik von 1848 bis 1852 französischer Staatspräsident und von 1852 bis 1870 als Napoleon III. Kaiser der ...

  2. Pope Pius VII was received at the Palais des Tuileries on 28 November 1804 to prepare for the upcoming coronation. During the Restoration, Louis XVIII died there on 16 September 1824. The Palace then became the seat of power under Napoleon III who made it his official residence throughout the Second Empire.

  3. During the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th it was known as the maison de fer, or Iron House; the story identifying it as a gift of the Emperor Napoleon III first appears in 1925 in a history by the former colonial administrator Paul Collard, who based his story that it was built for Napoleon's wife, the Empress Eugenie, to attend the opening ceremony of the Suez Canal in November ...

  4. The Reception of Siamese Ambassadors by Emperor Napoleon III (1808-73) at the Palace of Fontainebleau, 27 June 1861 Jean-Leon Gerome. Public domain. last edit: 26 Mar, 2021 by MikoNatt max resolution: 1432x704px Source. View all sizes. Add to album. Add ...

  5. Visit of Queen Victoria, 1855 20 and 25 August 1855. Visit of Queen Victoria, 1855. One of Napoleon III’s greatest aims was to reconcile his country with England. During the British Queen’s visit to France he made sure she was met with an ostentatiousness not witnessed in Versailles since the Monarchy. The emperor was very favourably ...

  6. DISCOVER MORE. Via Fontanella Borghese, 56 - 00186 Rome Phone: (+39) 347-7337.098. Residenza Napoleone III, luxury Suites located inside the sixteenth century Palazzo Ruspoli, on the legendary Via Condotti Rome near Piazza di Spagna.

  7. 9. Jan. 2017 · 28 July: Napoleon III took command of the Army of the Rhine at Metz. The force of numbers was unequal, as the French only disposed of 240 000 men, against the Prussians and their German allies with 500 000 men. 4 August: The Prussians took Wissembourg. 6 August: The Prussians entered French territory.